National Native American Law Students Association Moot Court Request for Judges

2016 National NALSA Moot Court Competition will be hosted by the Native American Law Students Association (NALSA) at Michigan State University College of Law, March 5th and 6th in East Lansing, MI. We are expecting over 60 teams from law schools across the United States to take part in this year’s competition. In order to ensure a successful competition for all those competing, we are kindly requesting your assistance.

Brief Judges:

The moot court rules require that briefs be scored anonymously by a panel of three judges. We are trying to get enough volunteers so that each panel will need to judge only four briefs (each of the three judges on a panel will receive and score the same four briefs). Briefs are due on January 18, 2016 and we hope to advance these briefs to judges no later than one week from the due date. We will send each judge a copy of the briefs, a score sheet, and a copy of the bench brief, which contains a guide to the issue and arguments. Judges must return the completed score sheets by no later than March 1st.
Team coaches are ineligible from participating as brief judges. Furthermore, brief judges are exempt from judging any team’s practice rounds or otherwise discussing the problem with participants, team faculty advisors, coaches, or other persons directly associated with preparing teams for competition.

Oral Argument Judges:
We will have a total of four sets of preliminary rounds on Saturday, March 5th. These rounds include two in the morning and two in the afternoon. We will also have several elimination rounds on Sunday, March 6th. We will hold an orientation session on Saturday morning, Saturday afternoon, and Sunday morning, and will also provide score sheets as well as a bench brief, clearly outlining the issues and arguments. The competition rules require that judges must fulfill one of the following:
(1) passed a federal, state, and/or tribal bar exam, and is a current member of a bar in good standing;
(2) currently a sitting judge or served as a judge for at least 2 of the previous 5 years;
(3) law school graduate currently clerking for a tribal, state, or federal judge; or
(4) fulltime law professor.

If interested in judging, click here to complete registration form.

For full announcement and description, click here.

For more information or if you have questions, contact nnalsa.vicepresident@gmail.com

 

Ninth Annual William C. Canby Jr. Lecture – 2 weeks from today!

Professor Lance Morgan, Associate Professor of Law and President and Chief Executive Officer of Ho-Chunk, Inc., will give a talk entitled: “The Rise of Tribes and the Fall of Federal Indian Law.”

Thursday, January 28 – Great Hall – 4:30 p.m.
Free and open to the public!!!
Please RSVP at conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/canby2016

This (live) lecture will qualify for 0.75 CLE credit hours towards the annual Arizona State Bar CLE requirements.

Professor Rebecca Tsosie and Director Kate Rosier were appointed to ASU’s American Indian Policy Institute Board of Directors

“As a scholar and professor of Federal Indian law, I am incredibly excited to be part of the AIPI Board and I am very honored to work with Traci Morris, whose visionary leadership will take the AIPI into a new generation of policy work on behalf of American Indian and Alaska Native Nations. I am honored to be part of this talented and distinguished Board, and I appreciate the opportunity to serve in this capacity,” said Rebecca Tsosie, Regents Professor of Law and Vice Provost for Inclusion and Community Engagement at ASU.

Kathleen Rosier, Director of the Indian Legal Program in the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law stated, “I am excited to be appointed to the AIPI Advisory Board. The Indian Legal Program has been a long time partner of the Institute and I am proud to participate in a more formal manner. Traci has assembled a talented team of people to build on the Institute’s past success and create new opportunities. I am excited to be a part of what is next.”
Read full article here.

Second Annual Tribal Government E-Commerce Conference – Early Bird Rate extended!

E-Commerce Conference V3_FlyerWiring the Rez: Expanding the Borders of Indian Country through E-Commerce
February 11 – 12, 2016
Wild Horse Pass Hotel & Casino, Chandler, AZ

Join us in exploring the emerging world of Tribal Digital Sovereignty and the way it can provide jobs, economic growth, and necessary governmental funds for Indian nations. The Indian country digital revolution, of course, must start, as does the conference, with the challenge of wiring the Rez to capitalize on e-commerce opportunities.  The first day of the conference will be devoted to that challenge. The second day of the conference will explore various e-commerce and telecommunications opportunities on which Indian nations have seized upon to build their economies and provide jobs and necessary governmental resources for their people, including telecommunications and broadcast industries, financial services, internet gaming and on-line sales.

The goal of this conference is to explore the ongoing need for tribes to build infrastructures that facilitate economic growth on their reservations, choosing the best projects, finding the right partners, understanding jurisdictional complexities and the necessity of fostering open dialogue with federal and state counterparts, while complying with appropriate federal guidelines.

Who should attend:

  • tribal leaders and officials
  • lawyers practicing in Indian country
  • on and off reservation economic planning and development experts
  • media developers
  • business and finance specialists
  • virtual casino managers and executives
  • online vendors and entrepreneurs
  • regulatory experts
  • cutting-edge scholars

Visit the website for agenda, event details and register: conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/ilp-wiringtherez

Ninth Annual William C. Canby Jr. Lecture – 3 weeks from today!

Professor Lance Morgan, Associate Professor of Law and President and Chief Executive Officer of Ho-Chunk, Inc., will give a talk entitled: “The Rise of Tribes and the Fall of Federal Indian Law.”

Thursday, January 28 – Great Hall – 4:30 p.m.
Free and open to the public!!!
Please RSVP at conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/canby2016

This (live) lecture will qualify for 0.75 CLE credit hours towards the annual Arizona State Bar CLE requirements.

Ninth Annual William C. Canby Jr. Lecture – 4 weeks from today!

Professor Lance Morgan, Associate Professor of Law and President and Chief Executive Officer of Ho-Chunk, Inc., will give a talk entitled: “The Rise of Tribes and the Fall of Federal Indian Law.”

Thursday, January 28 – Great Hall – 4:30 p.m.
Free and open to the public!!!
Please RSVP at conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/canby2016

This (live) lecture will qualify for 0.75 CLE credit hours towards the annual Arizona State Bar CLE requirements.

Second Annual Tribal Government E-Commerce Conference – Feb 11-12, 2016

E-Commerce Conference V3_FlyerWiring the Rez: Expanding the Borders of Indian Country through E-Commerce
February 11 – 12, 2016
Wild Horse Pass Hotel & Casino, Chandler, AZ

Join us in exploring the emerging world of Tribal Digital Sovereignty and the way it can provide jobs, economic growth, and necessary governmental funds for Indian nations. The Indian country digital revolution, of course, must start, as does the conference, with the challenge of wiring the Rez to capitalize on e-commerce opportunities.  The first day of the conference will be devoted to that challenge. The second day of the conference will explore various e-commerce and telecommunications opportunities on which Indian nations have seized upon to build their economies and provide jobs and necessary governmental resources for their people, including telecommunications and broadcast industries, financial services, internet gaming and on-line sales.

The goal of this conference is to explore the ongoing need for tribes to build infrastructures that facilitate economic growth on their reservations, choosing the best projects, finding the right partners, understanding jurisdictional complexities and the necessity of fostering open dialogue with federal and state counterparts, while complying with appropriate federal guidelines.

Who should attend:

  • tribal leaders and officials
  • lawyers practicing in Indian country
  • on and off reservation economic planning and development experts
  • media developers
  • business and finance specialists
  • virtual casino managers and executives
  • online vendors and entrepreneurs
  • regulatory experts
  • cutting-edge scholars

Visit the website for agenda, event details and register: conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/ilp-wiringtherez

Ninth Annual William C. Canby Jr. Lecture – January 28, 2016

Professor Lance Morgan, Associate Professor of Law and President and Chief Executive Officer of Ho-Chunk, Inc., will give a talk entitled: “The Rise of Tribes and the Fall of Federal Indian Law.”

Thursday, January 28 – Great Hall – 4:30 p.m.
Free and open to the public!!!
Please RSVP at conferences.asucollegeoflaw.com/canby2016

This (live) lecture will qualify for 0.75 CLE credit hours towards the annual Arizona State Bar CLE requirements.